Both the theory and practice of using hedonic regressions to remove quality effects in price indexes are implicitly developed for monopolistic competitive markets. In this paper, we theoretically and practically analyse the application of a standard hedonic regression for an oligopoly. In the theoretical work, we recast how for an oligopoly the standard hedonic regression may be unstable. Then in the empirical work, we recommend using the weighted imputation method for constructing an index and estimating separate hedonic regressions for market segments. We apply these recommendations to estimating a quality-adjusted price index for the Australian passenger vehicle market and find they make a substantial difference.
History
Journal
Manchester school
Volume
72
Pagination
423-442
Location
Abingdon, Eng.
ISSN
1463-6786
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2004, Blackwell Publishing and The Victoria University of Manchester